Title:
The Bipolar Millionaire
Author: John E. Wade II
Publisher: Sunbury Press
Pages: 164
Genre: Memoir
Author: John E. Wade II
Publisher: Sunbury Press
Pages: 164
Genre: Memoir
John E. Wade
II, retired CPA, author, investor, television producer, and philanthropist,
reveals in his memoir, The Bipolar Millionaire, his personal struggle
with bipolar disorder and how he has succeeded in living a balanced and blessed
life, despite his mental illness.
Wade takes the
reader through his family experiences, political aspirations and beliefs,
spiritual journey, relationship trials and errors, all while battling mental
illness.
Through his
religious beliefs, personal perseverance, and the help of friends, family, and
his mental health professionals, Wade lives an active, creative, and successful
life.
His memoir
doesn’t end with contentment at achieving a balance in his life, however.
Instead, Wade expresses a determined vision for the future, aiming to assist
humanity in what he describes as achieving heaven on earth through his writing,
political and spiritual endeavors.
For More Information
- The Bipolar Millionaire is available at Amazon.
- Pick up your copy at Barnes & Noble.
- Pick up your copy at the Sunbury Press store.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
Chapter One
I was
struggling and dropped into a walk from the jog required of fourth classmen. It
was an autumn day in 1963, just a month after I’d had a near-fatal attack of
meningitis, and I was still fighting to regain my strength. Panting for breath,
I was confronted by a first classman. He asked very directly why I wasn’t
jogging. I quickly replied that I had a medical excuse, knowing full well that
the excuse had expired. He ordered me to produce the excuse, which I did.
Noting its date, he nonetheless allowed me to proceed.
Soon, I was
in the academy hospital, lying flat on my back in an almost catatonic state,
unable to cope with my mental torment. Although this severe depression, the
first in my life, was not diagnosed at the time, it must have been my first
bipolar episode, possibly having been triggered by the recent attack of
meningitis.
My mother and
Carol, my then-girlfriend, came to try to revive me, but I don’t remember
responding. Years later, Carol told me that I asked her to help me kill myself,
but I have absolutely no memory of making such a request.
Until this
illness I had been a model cadet. I had prepared physically according to
academy guidelines, so the transition to basic cadet summer was rigorous but
easier than it would have been without vigorous training.
One other
thing that helped me during basic cadet summer was the stream of daily letters
from Carol. My fellow cadets were jealous, partly because of the letters, but
also because of the picture of her I had in my room. Even though it was black
and white, it was clear that she had blond hair, a sweet smile, and a pleasing,
pretty face. That face helped me get through the rest of what we all had to
endure to complete our training.
Each week we
were given certain “knowledge” to learn, such as types of aircraft or chains of
command. I always spent part of Sunday afternoon memorizing the information so
that I could recite it during Monday’s meals. The upperclassmen pointedly asked
several questions of each basic cadet, which kept us from finishing our entire
meal. The first classmen took turns performing the interrogation, but as the
questions were considerably shorter than the answers, they always had plenty of
time to eat. I always felt I was short-changed because I was the only one who
knew the trivia from the first day it was due, and yet I didn’t get a chance to
eat more than the other basic cadets.
At the end of
basic cadet summer, all the cadets were subjected to a physical fitness test,
and I scored the highest in my squadron. At about the same time, we also went
on a survival exercise in the mountains for which we were organized into small
groups with twenty-four hours’ worth of food and about a week’s time to find
our way back to the academy. The experience was particularly taxing for me. I
became so obsessed with saving my food that I still had some left when we got
back to the academy.
After the
final tests, those of us who successfully completed basic cadet summer became
fourth classmen. My personal excitement was not long lasting, however. Although
I had scored high marks on the physical tests, I was disappointed with my first
academic grades, which included some Bs, as I was used to all As in high
school. When I asked a first classman for his opinion, he said I did just fine considering
that I came from a weak high school.
Basic cadet
summer had ended—then the meningitis hit. I’ve since read that physical illness
can trigger the onset of bipolar disorder, and although the diagnosis was not
made at that time, I believe that is what had happened. My father eventually
was diagnosed as having bipolar disorder also, so it appears that I was
genetically predisposed to the condition, as is often the case.
I had entered
the academy in June 1963, and I received an honorable medical discharge that
December; whether I was right or wrong, I considered the situation a great
disgrace. It was definitely a life-defining event for me, and I was overcome
with depression.
But, there
was another aspect to my failure at the Air Force Academy that I didn’t
disclose to anyone else until years later: part of the reason I attended the
academy was that I had presidential ambitions, which I knew would be shattered
by the stigma of mental illness. I internalized and brooded over that stigma
for the next forty years.
To make
matters even worse, when I finally got home I also lost my girlfriend.
It was quite
a shock to me and had a negative effect on my confidence with the women I would
date for most of the rest of my life.
I have often
wondered what would have happened had I not had the meningitis and bipolar
episode. What aspects of my life would have been altered? It’s a haunting
possibility to consider.
Still, even
though the realization of some of my dreams has eluded me, I have had and am
having an interesting, fulfilling life in spite of bipolar disorder, and I
invite you to understand its role as I work toward what I believe is my destiny.
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